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Sen. Bill Nelson

Nelson asks USDA for assistance to address D-SNAP problems in Florida

Posted on October 17, 2017

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson today sent the following letter to Dept. of Agriculture Secretary Perdue requesting additional assistance and resources from the USDA to address the long lines and other problems associated with the Disaster Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (D-SNAP) registration process in Florida.
Following is the text of the letter sent to Secretary Perdue, a pdf copy is available here.

October 17, 2017

The Honorable Sonny Perdue
Secretary
U.S. Department of Agriculture
1400 Independence Ave SW
Washington, DC 20250
Dear Secretary Perdue,
I’m writing to request additional assistance from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) as families in Florida try to recover in the aftermath of Hurricane Irma. Specifically, I urge you to provide resources to address the long lines and other problems associated with the Disaster Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program registration process.
Last month, I wrote to you to urge USDA to approve a Disaster Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (D-SNAP) in Florida. While I am grateful that D-SNAP was approved, I am deeply concerned by news reports of how poorly it is being executed by the State of Florida. For example, the Miami Herald reported that 50,000 people came to one assistance center in South Florida—and many were turned away even after waiting in the heat for hours. Earlier today, the Palm Beach Post reported that thousands of people—including families with small children—were forced to wait outside for hours to apply for the program in Delray Beach. Some arrived as early as two o’clock in the morning just to get in line. This is unacceptable.
Given USDA’s experience with D-SNAP in other states, I encourage you to provide technical assistance, personnel, and other resources that could help Florida’s D-SNAP more effectively reach the individuals and families who need it most. Additionally, if certain requirements, such as the in-person interview, are adding to delays in the approval process, USDA should assist staff at the application centers to expedite interviews so that people can return to work and their families more quickly.
In the weeks since Hurricane Irma struck, Floridians continue to take steps to return to normal life. For a lot of folks, that means going to the grocery store. But for thousands of Floridians who lost food due to flooding or power outages, replacing that food isn’t easy: many also lost wages, spent money evacuating, or experienced unexpected costs like fixing a storm-damaged roof. D-SNAP is an important step in the recovery process after a major natural disaster like Hurricane Irma. I appreciate your efforts to ensure that Floridians can access this much-needed assistance as quickly as possible.

Sincerely,

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: D-SNAP, Sen. Bill Nelson, USDA

Sen. Bill Nelson's remarks following visit to Puerto Rico

Posted on October 16, 2017

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) took to the Senate floor today to share what he saw on the ground in Puerto Rico yesterday.
“We’ve had colleagues come back because of a flight over in a helicopter and say that they don’t see a lot of damage,” Nelson said. “Of course not, because they’re flying over parts of towns that most of the structures are made with concrete blocks. But when you get down there on the ground and go into the structure, then you’re going to see a different story.
“The hospitals are rationing services while they struggle to get the medicine and the fuel they need to power the generators. The dialysis centers, they’re struggling to get the water and fuel that they need to operate.
“I wanted to come to the floor of the Senate, having gotten back very late last night from Puerto Rico, and tell the Senate that more needs to be done.
“There should absolutely be no ambiguity about what is going on in Puerto Rico. It isn’t rosy. It isn’t that you can sit in a comfortable seat in a helicopter looking down from 1,500, 2,000 feet on structures that look like they are intact when, in fact, the reality on the ground below is completely different.
“Our fellow Americans are dying, and they desperately need our help. I have seen it with my own eyes on the ground. And I’m here to urge this congress and the administration that we have to act.”
Following is a rush transcript of Nelson’s remarks and here’s a link to watch video of his speech: https://youtu.be/5mEF6TY-VmE.

U.S. Senator Bill Nelson
Remarks on the Senate floor
October 16, 2017
Sen. Nelson: I want to talk about a matter of life and death. It’s happening as we speak in Puerto Rico.
I went there yesterday. I didn’t want to have a flyover of the island, but at the invitation of Governor Rosselló, I got into a helicopter so that I could get up into the mountains, into the areas that have been closed because people hadn’t been able to get there on the roads.
This is what I wanted to see. We’ve had colleagues come back because of a flight over in a helicopter and say that they don’t see a lot of damage. Of course not, because they’re flying over parts of towns that most of the structures are made with concrete blocks. But when you get down there on the ground and go into the structure, then you’re going to see a different story.
First of all, you’re going to smell a different story, because the water has accumulated, and now it’s turning to mold and mildew. And inhabitable conditions. But when you get up into the mountains, the places that were cut off, that not until a week ago did they have the roads cleared so that people could get up.
And as we speak, as of yesterday, still reconstructing the roads so that people can get on these narrow winding little dirt roads going up through the mountains. So for two and a half weeks communities have been completely cut off like the one that I saw yesterday — Utuado — way up in the mountains. I want to show you some pictures, but I want you to realize that today’s Monday.
Next Wednesday is four weeks since the hurricane has hit. Can you imagine going into a state of 3.5 million people, and 85% of the people did not have electricity? Or can you imagine going into a state — and, by the way, these are our fellow American citizens. They’re just in a territory. Can you imagine going into a state where 50%, a month after the hurricane, 50% of the people do not have potable water? It’s an absolute outrage, and I don’t think the American people realize what’s happening.
So let me be your eyes by what I saw yesterday.
So, Madam President, this is a river bottom in a, in the little town of Utuado. This side of the river is cut off from this side of the river because the one bridge washed out. If you look at this structure, the question is, how long is this going to last because it is tilting to the left, and any major rush of water down is going to take out this section. I want you to see how creative these people are. It’s hard to see at this distance, but this they have erected a cable system coming over to the other side. What they have taken is the basket of a grocery cart, taken the wheels off, taken the handles off. And this is on a pulley where these guys are pulling it over and then they pull it back. This is how people on this side of the river are getting food and water and medicine if they can’t walk across.
This is how people are surviving now when this section of the bridge goes — and it’s just a matter of time — they’re going to try to hook up a cable over here at the top of this river bank over to the top of this river bank and do the same kind of pulley.
You know, here in the states on the mainland, if something like this happened, the Corps of Engineers would be there. We’d be rebuilding. The Department of Transportation would be rebuilding that. Ladies and gentlemen of the Senate, these are our fellow Americans, citizens. And they’re going without.
All right, let me show you another one. So this is the bank of another river. By the way, on this bank, let me show you the result. That’s what happened. This whole house. Right behind here, I’ll show you the church in a minute. So I asked the pastor did the people survive. He said one was trapped in the house. They were able to get that person out. The others had already fled. But you can see the force of the extra rain, the water coming down, and houses like that are history. Here’s that same section of the river with the church in the background, the church survived. I talked to the pastor of the church. Here I am having a conversation with the people that live on this side. I asked the pastor did he lose any parishioners. He did not. On his side of his church, he has a dish. And because he has a generator, he is the only person in this town that has any kind of communication, in this case through the satellite dish for television.
Everything else is either being run on a generator or else there is no electricity. And as you know, these generators are not powerful enough to run air conditioners. And, therefore, you go through the water accumulates, the mold and mildew starts to accumulate. And all the health effects as a result of that.
And so, Madam President, does this look like something that we would have in this country? Does this look like something that we would have in this country? Or does this look like a third world country? Do these images and these photographs, do they bring to mind other Caribbean nations that we’ve seen that have been devastated by earthquakes and hurricanes? Think about what happened to Haiti.
So when people go down and happen to go to San Juan, which by the way, 85% of San Juan is without power, you see these little pockets. And of course they’re trying to get the generators going to the hospitals for the obvious reasons. They need the generators to go to stations where people are getting their dialysis treatments. That’s obvious. But what about the wear and tear on the generators and the replacements? The governor of Puerto Rico, Governor Rosselló, has a very ambitious schedule.
He wants to restore 95% of power by the middle of December. I hope that the governor is right. But what I’m afraid is with the Army Corps of Engineers going through that laborious procedures, which it’s been turned over to them to get the electrical grid and structures up and running, I’m afraid it’s going to be a lot longer.
I asked for estimates on the immediate needs, and especially the rebuilding of the grid. $4 billion. Are we going to be able to get that for them? What are going to be the ultimate needs of Puerto Rico if, as we just heard, the senator from Texas talk about his state and the estimates that you’ve heard out of Texas of being as much as $100 billion. What about the needs of Puerto Rico? What about the needs of Florida? What about the needs of the Virgin Islands? We got a supplemental coming up but is that going to take care in the interim up until December the needs of all of those four areas that have been hit hard?
If Texas is $100 billion, long-term fix for Puerto Rico may well be $80 billion to $90 billion. And who knows what it’s going to be for Florida and the Virgin Islands. And, therefore, are we in this Congress with or without the leadership of the White House going to have the stomach to help our federal fellow American citizens?
Oh, I’m sure we’re going to help Texas, and I’m sure — I certainly hope so, we’re going to help my state of Florida, but are we willing to help the American citizens in the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico?
So it’s not a rosy picture when you hear some members of Congress come back and say they didn’t see a lot of damage. It’s people using a pulley that have jerry-rigged across a river to survive with daily supplies of food and fuel and water, and you can’t see that from the air, and if you have no power, you have no water, you have no sewer systems, and what you have is chaos.
So a month since Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico. The hospitals are rationing services while they struggle to get the medicine and the fuel they need to power the generators. The dialysis centers. They’re struggling to get the water and fuel that they need to operate. So I, like many, have written in this case to the U.S. to do more to help these dialysis centers obtain the supplies that they need.
And so I wanted to come to the floor of the Senate, having gotten back very late last night from Puerto Rico, and tell the Senate that more needs to be done, and it’s going to have to be done for a very long period of time.
We have to do more to ensure the supplies that are reaching the island are getting to those that need them. Remember, remember things got piled up in the ports in the first week, and they didn’t get out to be distributed. It took what Senator Rubio and I were saying at the time, it’s going to take the united states military, which is uniquely organized and capable of distribution of long logistical lines, and it wasn’t until a week later after the hurricane that the three-star General Buchanan was put in charge.
I met with him and the head of FEMA down in the Puerto Rico area, that head of FEMA. Finally, those supplies are getting out, but this is supplies for survival. So we need to pass a disaster relief package that fully funds Puerto Rico’s recovery. We need to provide Puerto Rico with the community development block grant money that Governor Rosselló has requested, just like we need the CDBGs for Texas and Florida and the Virgin Islands as well, and we need to make Puerto Rico eligible for permanent work assistance so that they can start to rebuild their infrastructure immediately.
So I want to make something fairly clear. There should absolutely be no ambiguity about what is going on in Puerto Rico. It isn’t rosy. It isn’t that you can sit in a comfortable seat in a helicopter looking down from 1,500, 2,000 feet on structures that look like they are intact when, in fact, the reality on the ground below is completely different. And certainly, they didn’t go up there and see all those bridges washed out in the mountains. They didn’t see people scrambling for food. They didn’t see the Puerto Rican National Guard rebuilding that little narrow dirt road, winding along the banks of that river. They didn’t see or walk into the buildings that you would almost be overwhelmed with the smell, the smells particularly of mold and mildew.
People have died as a result of this hurricane. People have died because of the lack of supplies and power. Our fellow Americans are dying, and they desperately need our help. And ladies and gentlemen of the Senate, I have seen it with my own eyes on the ground. And I’m here to urge this congress and the administration that we have to act and act for a very long period of time. Our citizens in Puerto Rico need our help. We have the responsibility to help fellow citizens in need.
Madam President, I yield the floor.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Puerto Rico, Sen. Bill Nelson

Sen. Bill Nelson on latest moves to undermine ACA

Posted on October 13, 2017

Following is a statement from U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) on President Trump’s latest actions to undermine the Affordable Care Act:
“In just two moves this week, President Trump continued his sabotage of the nation’s health care law by allowing for health care without the necessary protections for people with pre-existing conditions and in his latest move, ending payments that help people afford their health coverage. As I have said before, we need to focus on bipartisan solutions that will make quality health insurance affordable by fixing the existing law.”

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: aca, Affordable Care Act, Sen. Bill Nelson

Nelson files tax-relief bill to help victims of hurricanes

Posted on October 3, 2017

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) filed legislation today to provide some much needed tax relief to individuals and small businesses hit hardest by Hurricanes Irma and Maria.
One of the groups Nelson’s bill seeks to help are Florida’s citrus growers who suffered devastating losses as a result of Hurricane Irma. In fact, some experts estimate that as much as 70 percent of Florida’s citrus crop was lost due to the storm, with some growers losing as much as 90 percent of their crop.
If approved, Nelson’s bill would, among other things, allow Florida’s growers to immediately deduct post-storm clean-up costs from their taxes, including the costs associated with removing and replanting downed trees.
“Florida’s citrus growers took a devastating hit from Hurricane Irma and we need to do everything we can to help this vital part of Florida’s economy,” Nelson said.
In addition to helping Florida’s citrus growers, Nelson’s bill would help provide some relief to people in Puerto Rico and other U.S. territories by extending to them some popular tax breaks already offered to taxpayers living on the mainland – including the Child Tax Credit, which provides families a federal tax credit of up to $1,000 per child.
It would also allow individuals and businesses to create tax-free savings accounts to help cover expenses incurred during future disasters.
The legislation Nelson filed today now heads to the Senate Finance Committee for consideration.
Below is a section-by-section summary of Nelson’s bill. The full text of Nelson’s legislation is available here.

NATIONAL DISASTER TAX RELIEF ACT

TITLE I—TAX RELIEF RELATING TO DISASTERS

Sec. 101. Allows for the immediate deduction of disaster cleanup expenses, including the cost of removing and replanting downed trees. 
Sec. 102. Extends net operating loss carryback from two to three years for disaster losses. 
Sec. 103. Provides an additional $500 million in New Markets Tax Credits per year for community development entities in disaster areas. 
Sec. 104. Allows victims of a disaster to exclude non-business debt forgiveness from their gross income.
Sec. 105. Allows additional tax-exempt advance refunding of municipal bonds for recovery projects in disaster areas, with a cap of $2 billion for each state.
Sec. 106. Increases the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit allocation for states damaged by a disaster, based on the population of qualified disaster areas within the state, and allows disaster areas to retain applicable difficult development area designations for 2 years.

TITLE II—PERMANENT DISASTER TAX RELIEF PROVISIONS

Sec. 201. Excludes State and local government disaster mitigation payments from taxable income. 
Sec. 202. Allows taxpayers to create tax-exempt catastrophe savings accounts to pay expenses related to a major disaster. The account balances are capped at (1) $75,000 (for individuals with homeowner insurance deductibles of not more than $1,000); and (2) $150,000 (for individuals with deductibles of more than $1,000). The accounts can also receive tax-free reimbursements from insurance companies.

TITLE III—OTHER PERMANENT TAX PROVISIONS

Sec. 301. Permanently extends the full cover over program for Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, a portion of which expired in 2016. The cover over program provides a remittance to Puerto Rico and USVI for excise taxes on rum shipped to the mainland. 
Sec. 302. Permanently extends the deduction for domestic manufacturing in Puerto Rico, which expired in 2016.
Sec. 303. Makes the Child Tax Credit available to families in U.S. territories—including Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands—in the same way it is for mainland families.

TITLE IV – TREATMENT OF CERTAIN POSSESSIONS

Sec. 401. Allows U.S. citizens in Puerto Rico and other U.S. territories to benefit from some of the tax relief in the bill.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Hurricane Victims, Sen. Bill Nelson, tax-relief bill

Sen. Bill Nelson statement on Las Vegas shooting

Posted on October 2, 2017

Following is a statement from U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) on the shooting in Las Vegas:
“Our thoughts and prayers are with all the victims of this horrific attack. As the investigation continues, we will learn more about what led to this tragedy in Las Vegas, but at some point we, as a society, have to stand up and say enough is enough.”

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Las Vegas shooting, Sen. Bill Nelson

Sen. Bill Nelson statement on Cuba sonic attacks

Posted on September 29, 2017

Following is a statement from U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) on the State Department’s response today to continued acoustic attacks on U.S. personnel in Cuba. Nelson spoke today with State Department officials about the response:
“The fact that the Cuban government isn’t protecting the health and wellbeing of our U.S. Embassy personnel is inexcusable. With the loss of hearing and stroke-like-symptoms, the Cuban government owes an explanation and reparations to the families of those injured and must work to ensure these attacks cease immediately. In the meantime, the Cuban Embassy’s staff in Washington, D.C. should be reduced by the same proportionate number of U.S. personnel recalled.”

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Cuba, Sen. Bill Nelson, sonic attacks

Statement from Sen. Bill Nelson on tragic deaths in Hollywood

Posted on September 13, 2017

Following is a statement from U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson on the deaths of six senior citizens at a nursing home in Hollywood, Florida:
“This is an inexcusable tragedy that frail patients would die of heat exhaustion without it being recognized and taking them to the hospital next door. I have spoken with the Secretary of HHS to get to the bottom of this. We need to make sure we’re doing everything we can to keep our seniors safe during this difficult time.”
A link to the latest from AP here.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Hurricane Irma, Nursing Home, Sen. Bill Nelson, Senior Citizens, tragic deaths

Sen. Bill Nelson on Hurricane Irma

Posted on September 7, 2017

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) took to the Senate floor today to urge the immediate passage of a $15 billion disaster aid package needed to fund FEMA past Friday, as Hurricane Irma approaches the Florida coast.
“I urge the Senate, I implore the Senate, I beg the Senate to pass this package,” Nelson said on the Senate floor. “FEMA is stretched, and, of all things, FEMA runs out of money unless we act by tomorrow.”
“I left Florida in the middle of the night to come back to make sure that it has my stamp of imprimatur on this legislation,” he continued, “And I’m very glad that the majority leader has agreed to double the amount – basically $7.5 billion, for FEMA and another $7.5 billion for CDBG, Community Development Block Grants, both of which would be for natural disasters.”
“I have emailed yesterday to the administrator of FEMA, Brock Long,” Nelson added, “People are trying to get out, but they’re stuck on the roads, and now they’re running out of gasoline … An urgent plea that I made yesterday that I would make to FEMA again, that we get gasoline into the state of Florida.”

Prior to speaking on the floor, Nelson did a series of national interviews this morning as the storm approaches. Below you will find links to view each of those:

  • Nelson on CNN at 8:30 a.m.: 

    • Nelson on The Weather Channel at 9:00 a.m.:

    • Nelson on Fox News at 9:20 a.m.: 


And here’s additional background on some of the other things Nelson is working on as Hurricane Irma approaches:
Sen. Nelson was in Miami and West Palm Beach Wednesday meeting with local emergency management officials in each county ahead of the storm. 
On Wednesday, Nelson sent letters to:

  • Sens. Schumer and McConnell calling on Congress to add additional funding to a $7.85 billion disaster aid package the House passed Wednesday for Hurricane Harvey to “account for the additional costs FEMA will likely incur responding to Hurricane Irma.” (Copy of that letter is here.)
  • Brock Long, the head of FEMA, to help address South Florida’s growing shortage of gasoline.(Copy of that letter is here.)
  • Acting NOAA Administrator Ben Friedman regarding the need for a reliable hurricane hunter backup capability. (Copy of that letter is here.)
  • The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission urging the Commission to undertake additional efforts to educate consumers on the dangers of carbon monoxide poisoning from the improper use of portable generators. (Copy of that letter is here.)

On Tuesday, Nelson sent letters to:

  • The Federal Trade Commission asking that the agency begin closely monitoring and, if necessary, take swift action against retailers engaged in price gouging as Florida prepares for Hurricane Irma. (Copy of that letter is here.)
  • President Trump urging him to approve Florida’s request for a pre-landfall emergency declaration for the state of Florida in anticipation of Hurricane Irma. (Copy of that letter is here.)

Also on Tuesday, Nelson spoke by phone to:

  • Brock Long, the head of FEMA. He said FEMA is ready and is prepositioning people and supplies around the state.
  • Admiral Zukunft, the commandant of the Coast Guard. He said he is already prepositioning ships and aircraft to come in right after the storm hits.
  • Col. Kirk with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. He said he’s ready and that Lake Okeechobee still has the capacity to hold another three feet of water before this hurricane would threaten the dike.
  • General Calhoun with the Florida National Guard. He said they are ready and prepositioned.
  • Elaine Chao, Secretary of Transportation, and asked her to urge the state to go ahead and lift the tolls on South Florida’s roadways, particularly I-95 and Florida’s Turnpike, to make it easier for folks who are starting to evacuate.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Hurricane Irma, Sen. Bill Nelson

Sen. Bill Nelson asks FTC to monitor price gouging ahead of Irma

Posted on September 5, 2017

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) today asked the head of the Federal Trade Commission to begin closely monitoring and, if necessary, take swift action against retailers engaged in price gouging as Florida prepares for Hurricane Irma.
“As Hurricane Irma preparations begin in earnest, it is essential that first responders and evacuees in Florida are able to access gasoline and other refined petroleum products free from price distortions caused by anticompetitive practices,” Nelson wrote in a letter to Acting FTC Chairman, Maureen Ohlhausen. “Accordingly, I ask that you closely monitor retail gasoline outlet pricing in the coming weeks to detect and defeat any price gouging schemes.”
Following is the text of Nelson’s letter to the FTC:

September 5, 2017

The Honorable Maureen K. Ohlhausen
Acting Chairman
Federal Trade Commission
600 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20580
Dear Acting Chairman Ohlhausen:
I write today to urge the commission to closely monitor retail gasoline prices in the wake of Hurricane Harvey and in anticipation of Hurricane Irma’s impact, and take swift action against retailers that attempt to use this tragedy to engage in consumer price gouging.
Hurricane Harvey has caused billions of dollars in damage in Texas and Louisiana, and uprooted tens of thousands of families. In addition, it has had a substantial impact on oil refining operations. Over the past week, we have seen efforts to offset the gasoline price increases attributable to supply disruption, including the release of one million barrels of crude oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to a refinery in Louisiana that was largely unaffected by the storm. These efforts appear to have stabilized wholesale gasoline prices.
Unfortunately, Hurricane Irma now poses a grave threat to Florida and many other areas of the Southeastern United States. While continued disruption to some refinery operations may continue to contribute to higher retail gasoline prices, past experience in Florida and elsewhere has shown that some unscrupulous operators will seek to magnify these natural price increases to take advantage of consumers – including those that may be trying to prepare for or evacuate from an impending hurricane.
Following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, Congress directed the commission to study the price gouging issue and determine the need for further action in this area. In a 2006 report on this issue, the commission stated that “it has a strong role to play in this area” by both “enforcing the antitrust laws strictly to prohibit business behavior that has anticompetitive effects” and continuing to “remain vigilant about any distortions that may harm competition or consumers in petroleum markets.”
As Hurricane Harvey rescue and recovery operations continue and as Hurricane Irma preparations begin in earnest, it is essential that first responders and evacuees in Florida are able to access gasoline and other refined petroleum products free from price distortions caused by anticompetitive practices.
Accordingly, I ask that you closely monitor retail gasoline outlet pricing in the coming weeks to detect and defeat any price gouging schemes. Thank you in advance for your assistance with this critical consumer and public safety issue.

Sincerely,

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: FTC, Hurricane Irma, Price Gouging, Sen. Bill Nelson

Sen. Bill Nelson statement on DACA

Posted on September 5, 2017

Following is a statement from U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) on the president’s decision to end the DACA program:
“DREAMers are our neighbors and our friends. They are our high school valedictorians and our first responders. It’s time for us, as a country, to come together and acknowledge the many contributions that DREAMers have made to our great country, instead of trying to kick them out of the only country they’ve ever known.”

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: DACA, Sen. Bill Nelson

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